comfort food – Tourisme Montréal Bloghttp://www.tourisme-montreal.org/blog
Fri, 09 Dec 2016 19:47:32 +0000en-UShourly1GREAT COMFORT FOOD WARMS UP WINTER IN MONTREALhttp://www.tourisme-montreal.org/blog/great-comfort-food-warms-up-winter-in-montreal/
http://www.tourisme-montreal.org/blog/great-comfort-food-warms-up-winter-in-montreal/#respondTue, 11 Dec 2012 19:29:01 +0000http://www.tourisme-montreal.org/blog/?p=7980If you’re not a winter person like I am, then you’ll know that the best thing to do when the temperature dips below freezing and white stuff starts to pile up, is to find the closest hearty meal, sleep it off and hope things are different when you wake up. Unfortunately, science and common sense dictates that no matter how hard we try to make the earth spin faster, winter is coming and we have to brace for it.

]]>The best thing to do when the temperature dips below freezing is to find the closest hearty meal. So, to help prepare for the imminent snowfall and arctic winds, here’s a list of dining options that will stick to your ribs and help keep you warm through the winter months…

A Quebec traditional comfort food, the shepherd’s pie from restaurant Mâche (pictured above) in the Latin Quarter is definitely a hit for people avoiding the cold. With six different variations of the original classic of ground beef, corn and mashed potatoes, this spot is offering variations that include pulled pork, merguez sausage and veal.

Restaurant Biarritz on the Main offers up a seasonal menu that changes weekly. Reflecting what’s available at the market, the winter season sees its share of soul soothing menu options such as the pork belly confit with cauliflower puree, romanesco, currants and capers.

Baxo, located in the Old Port, serves up modern terroir inspired dishes in an atmosphere as rustic that is able to charm the snowpants off of winter. Not to be missed is the entrecote for two – served on their signature butcher block with seasonal root vegetables, this dish will help you hibernate well into the night.

There’s nothing like a big bowl of hot soup on a cold and blistery day to keep you warm. What’s even better is if that bowl of soup is piled high with barbecue pork, saucy braised beef. Nudo in Chinatown offers a dinner and a show – the show being your noodles being made in front of your eyes.

If it’s coming in after having a snowball fight, or fighting your neighbour for a parking spot dug out in a snow-bank, warming up with a hot chocolate is synonymous with winter. Nowhere does it better than Montreal’s primere “Chocolate Bar”, Cacao 70. Close to 25 different kinds of hot chocolate ranging from 29.2% purity, all the way to 100% (with or without alcohol), a definite chocolate lover and aficionado’s fantasy destination.